SAMUELSON: Punishing the rich won't elevate the poor

Unless you are exceptionally coldblooded, it's hard not to be disturbed by today's huge economic inequality. The gap between the rich and the poor is enormous, wider than most Americans would (almost certainly) wish. But this incontestable reality has made economic inequality a misleading intellectual fad, blamed for many of our problems. Actually, the reverse is true: Economic inequality is usually a consequence of our problems and not a cause.

For starters, the poor are not poor because the rich are rich. The two conditions are generally unrelated. Mostly, the rich got rich by running profitable small businesses (car dealerships, builders), creating big enterprises (Google, Microsoft), being at the top of lucrative occupations (lawyers, doctors, actors, athletes), managing major companies or inheriting fortunes. By contrast, the very poor often face circumstances that make their lives desperate. In an interview with The New Yorker, President Obama recently put it this way:

"(The) 'pathologies' that used to be attributed to the African-American community in particular - single-parent households, and drug abuse, and men dropping out of the labor force, and an underground economy - (are now seen) in larger numbers in white working-class communities."

Solutions elude us. Though some low-income workers would benefit from a higher minimum wage, most of the very poor would not. They're not in the labor force; they either can't work - too young, old, disabled or unskilled - or won't work. Of the 46 million people below the government's poverty line in 2012, only 6 percent had year-round full-time jobs.

It's also not true, as widely asserted, that the wealthiest Americans (the notorious top 1 percent) have captured all the gains in productivity and living standards of recent decades. The Congressional Budget Office examined income trends for the past three decades. It found sizable gains for all income groups.

True, the top 1 percent outdid everyone. From 1980 to 2010, their inflation-adjusted pretax incomes grew a spectacular 190 percent, almost a tripling. But for the poorest fifth of Americans, pretax incomes for these years rose 44 percent.

Finally, widening economic inequality is sometimes mistakenly blamed for causing the Great Recession and the weak recovery. The argument, as outlined by two economists at Washington University in St. Louis, goes like this. In the 1980s, income growth for the bottom 95 percent of Americans slowed. People compensated by borrowing more. All the extra debt led to a consumption boom that was unsustainable. The housing bubble and crash followed. Now, weak income growth of the bottom 95 percent "helps explain the slow recovery."

This theory is half right. An unsustainable debt boom did fuel an unsustainable consumption boom. But growing inequality didn't cause these twin booms. Just because households wanted to borrow didn't mean lenders had to lend. They lent, signifying relaxed credit standards, because they thought that the risks had dropped.

Americans in the top 1 percent are convenient scapegoats. They don't naturally command much sympathy, and their rewards sometimes seem outsized or outlandish.

When most people are getting ahead, they don't worry much about this economic inequality. When progress stalls, they do. We create simplistic narratives and imagine that punishing the rich will miraculously uplift the poor. This vents popular resentments, even as it encourages self-deception.

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SAMUELSON: Punishing the rich won't elevate the poor

Unless you are exceptionally coldblooded, it's hard not to be disturbed by today's huge economic inequality. The gap between the rich and the poor is enormous, wider than most Americans would (almost

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